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Women’s sexual arousal

Jane ThomasJanuary 10, 2018

Jane Thomas

Published in 1972, ‘Joy of Sex’ by Alex Comfort MD was revolutionary at the time because it suggested a new openness and a sense of fun in modern sexual relationships. Liberal-minded couples welcomed the idea that it could now be considered normal and ‘uninhibited’ to enjoy sex as a natural part of an adult relationship.

Drawings, as opposed to photographs, portrayed the physical intimacy between two lovers sensitively. This tasteful presentation of a couple’s sex life avoided any potential concerns that the book might be pornographic in nature, making it attractive to women in particular.

In fact, Alex Comfort never ran a sex therapy practice and so he was not presenting a heavily researched view of sex. He was offering suggestions, based on his own sex life (with his much younger mistress – not his wife), for how other couples might bring some variety to sex. ‘Joy of Sex’ documents a man’s appreciation of eroticism and the activities that he found pleasurable.

The book is not explicit about the woman’s arousal and my mistake was to assume that the relationship illustrated was based on equality between the sexes. I assumed – wrongly as it happens – that other women would also be looking for a sexual (rather than an emotional) payback from their sexual relationships involving similar levels of sexual pleasure that men enjoy.

A woman can have sex for years without ever experiencing sexual arousal or orgasm. This explains why the average age to come out is 17 years old for gay men but 40 years old for gay women. Of course, a woman’s sexual fantasies might cause her to suspect she is lesbian earlier than this. But a lesbian woman can marry and have children just as a heterosexual woman does because female orgasm is not required for her either to participate in a sexual relationship or for reproduction.

Sexual relationships are not based on equal sexual pleasure

In general sex manuals can be misleading because they tend to describe the physical activities of intercourse, or masturbation for that matter, without simultaneously discussing what is happening in the person’s head. The implication is that the physical sensations of sex fully occupy the woman’s mind throughout and create by themselves the level of sexual arousal required to experience orgasm. In other words, the assumption is that women respond sexually just as men do.

The fact that women are much slower to arouse may be acknowledged but it is rarely explained why this should be or what the consequences might be for a sexual relationship. Any difficulties with female orgasm are often dismissed as insignificant.

“Frigidity – This does not mean failure to enjoy sex when one is dead with fatigue… Nor does it mean failure to get a mind-blowing orgasm on every single occasion. If it does mean these things, every woman is frigid. …” (p198 Joy of Sex 1972)

Perhaps all that is missing from ‘Joy of Sex’ is simply an acknowledgement of how much more difficult it is for a woman to apply her sexual fantasies to sex with a partner. Ironically, although it may suit men to have the visual benefits of covers off and lights on, women may be the opposite. I close my eyes during masturbation to focus on fantasy and during sex I also prefer subdued lighting to blot out the everyday world so that I can fully absorb myself in enjoying my physical arousal.

Even today the average person does not associate women’s sexuality with the capacity to enjoy sexual arousal and orgasm. When I asked a young female doctor for information about female sexuality, she was embarrassed. The sexually responsive woman is more often associated with women in erotic fiction and pornography, providing men with a sexual turn-on, than with women’s real life experiences.

An older male doctor referred me to a family planning library in London that provided information about contraception and childbirth. Sexual pleasure is associated with the sex industry where women are either being exploited or are exploiting men for money. Since the sex industry is fuelled by men’s interest, not women’s, it is difficult to find un-biased sources of information about female sexuality.

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2 comments for “Women’s sexual arousal”

Veronica Philbert-Roberts

December 29, 2017 at 4:27 pm

The women of the View were discussing why there seem to be a rise in lesbians coming out in their 40’s after they had lived with men and raised families. Your opinions on why this is, has piqued my interest. No one has ever given this reason before…of women not really fully understanding or enjoying their sexuality until later in life. Very enlightening perspective….great story.

My conclusion, sadly, is that women enjoy their sexuality (in terms of their ability to orgasm rather than their ability to arouse men) through sexual fantasies.

The nature of women’s sexual fantasies (relatively complex psychological scenarios – men’s fantasies are much more basic) makes them unsuitable for use with a partner.

Hence sexual relationships tend to focus on male sexual arousal and orgasm since men are able to become aroused enough for orgasm simply through an appreciation of the sexual attributes of a sexual partner.